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General Licensing Class Coax Cable Your organization and dates here
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2 Amateur Radio General Class Element 3 Course Presentation ELEMENT 3 SUB-ELEMENTS (Groupings) 1 - Your Passing CSCE 2 - Your New General Bands 3 - FCC Rules 4 - Be a VE 5 - Voice Operations 6 - CW Lives 7 - Digital Operating 8 - In An Emergency 9 - Skywave Excitement
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3 Amateur Radio General Class Element 3 Course Presentation ELEMENT 3 SUB-ELEMENTS (Groupings) 10 - Your HF Transmitter 11 - Your Receiver 12 - Oscillators & Components 13 - Electrical Principles 14 - Circuits 15 - Good Grounds 16 - HF Antennas 17 - Coax Cable 18 -RF & Electrical Safety
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Coax Cable 50 and 75 ohms are the typical characteristic impedances of coaxial cables used for antenna feed lines at amateur stations. (G9A02) The attenuation of coaxial cable increases as the frequency of the signal it is carrying increases. (G9A05) RF feed line losses usually expressed in dB per 100 ft. (G9A06)
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Coax Cable
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The percentage of power loss that would result from a transmission line loss of 1 dB would be approx. 20.5 %. (G5B10) 300 ohms is the characteristic impedance of flat ribbon TV type twinlead. (G9A03) The distance between the centers of the conductors and the radius of the conductors determine the characteristic impedance of a parallel conductor antenna feed line. (G9A01) 300 Ohm Twin LeadAir Dielectric Coaxial CableParallel two-wire line
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Coax Cable To prevent standing waves on an antenna feed line, the antenna feed-point impedance must be matched to the characteristic impedance of the feed line. (G9A07) A difference between feed-line impedance and antenna feed- point impedance is the reason for the occurrence of reflected power at the point where a feed line connects to an antenna. (G9A04) Standing wave ratio can also be determined with a directional wattmeter. (G4B10)
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Coax Cable A standing wave ratio of 1:1 will result from the connection of a 50-ohm feed line to a non-reactive load having a 50-ohm impedance. (G9A11) SWR = Z 1 / Z 2 50 / 501 : 1 VSWR
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Coax Cable If you feed a vertical antenna that has a 25-ohm feed-point impedance with 50-ohm coaxial cable, the SWR will be 2:1. (G9A12) A 4:1 standing wave ratio will result from the connection of a 50-ohm feed line to a non-reactive load having a 200-ohm impedance. (G9A09) A standing wave ratio of 5:1 will result from the connection of a 50-ohm feed line to a non-reactive load having a 10-ohm impedance. (G9A10) 50 / 252:1 VSWRSWR = Z 1 / Z 2 200/ 504:1 VSWR SWR = Z 1 / Z 2 50/ 105:1 VSWR
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Coax Cable If the SWR on an antenna feed line is 5 to 1, and a matching network at the transmitter end of the feed line is adjusted to 1 to 1 SWR, the resulting SWR on the feed line is still 5 to 1. (G9A08) The antenna tuner allows the transmitter to see a matched impedance This delivers full power. It does not change the antenna or feedline impedance on its output. If you feed an antenna that has a 300-ohm feed-point impedance with 50- ohm coaxial cable, the SWR will be 6:1. (G9A13) Antenna tuner with built in dual needle SWR meter SWR = Z 1 / Z 2 300/ 506:1 VSWR
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Coax Cable The type-N connector is a moisture-resistant RF connector useful to 10 GHz. (G6C16) Type-N
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Coax Cable The SMA connector is a small threaded connector suitable for signals up to several GHz. (G6C18) A PL-259 connector is commonly used for RF service at frequencies up to 150 MHz. (G6C13) A high quality SMA connector is useable to 18 GHz and beyond Male PL-259 PL-259 T-Connector
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Coax Cable 200 feet is the maximum height above ground to which an antenna structure may be erected without requiring notification to the FAA and registration with the FCC, provided it is not at or near a public use airport. (G1B01) Maximum Antenna Height without FCC Approval. 200 Ft.
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